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Dangerous Sport: What Texas Won't Let Kenneth Foster Read
Who knew sports history could strike fear in the most fearsome prison system in the United States? But what other explanation could there be for the fact that the history of "America's Pastime" is being denied to Texas Death Row prisoner Kenneth Foster Jr.?
Kenneth's case has garnered international attention because both prosecution and defense agree that he was 80 feet away from the murder of Michael LaHood. Earlier in the evening, he had been driving the man who pulled the trigger, Maurecio Brown. In Texas, that's enough to land him on Death Row.
Foster and I began to exchange letters on sports and politics after he read my book Welcome to the Terrordome.
"I have never had the opportunity to view sports in this way," he wrote. "And as I went through these revelations I began to have epiphanies about the way sports have a similar existence in prison. The similarities shook me .... Facing execution, the only thing that I began to get obsessive about was how to get heard and be free, and as the saying goes -- you can't serve 2 gods. Sports, as you know, becomes a way of life. You monitor it, you almost come to breathe it. Sports becomes a way of life in prison, because it becomes a way of survival. For men that don't have family or friends to help them financially ...it becomes a way to occupy your time. That's another sad story in itself, but it's the root to many men's obsession with sports."
It didn't matter whether he was on Death Row or Park Avenue -- I felt smarter having read his words. But even more satisfying was the thought that thinking about sports took his mind -- for a moment -- away from his imminent death, the 11-year-old daughter he will never touch again and the words he will never write.
I thought that sending him my first book, What's My Name Fool?: Sports and Resistance in the U.S., would be a good follow-up -- but here is where the Texas Department of Corrections got its briefs in a bunch.
A form titled "Texas Dept of Criminal Justice, Publication review/denial notification" issued to Kenneth on Aug. 9 says that What's My Name Fool? was banned from the row: "It contains material that a reasonable person would construe as written solely for the purpose of communicating information designed to achieve the breakdown of prisons through offender disruption such as strikes or riots."
It specifically said that Pages 44 and 55 met this criteria.
After lifting my jaw off the ground, I went to read those dangerous pages.
On Page 44, the radioactive quote in question was from that seditious revolutionary Jackie Robinson -- you know, the guy whose number is retired by all of Major League Baseball. I quoted Robinson's autobiography, I Never Had It Made, when he wrote about suffering racism early in his rookie season:
"I felt tortured and I tried to just play ball and ignore the insults. But it was really getting to me. ... For one wild and rage-crazed moment I thought, 'To hell with Mr. Rickey's "noble experiment." ... To hell with the image of the patient black freak I was supposed to create.' I could throw down my bat, stride over to that Phillies dugout, grab one of those white sons of [expletive] and smash his teeth in with my despised black fist. Then I could walk away from it all."
On Page 55, the offensive passage was about Jack Johnson's defeat of the "Great White Hope," Jim Jeffries. It read:
"Johnson was faster, stronger and smarter than Jeffries. He knocked Jeffries out with ease.
"After Johnson's victory, there were race riots around the country -- in Illinois, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Texas and Washington, D.C. Most of the riots consisted of white lynch mobs attacking Blacks, and Blacks fighting back. This reaction to a boxing match was one of the most widespread racial uprisings in the U.S. until the 1968 assassination of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr."
Let's forget about the fact that there is something bizarre -- almost comical -- about Texas prison authorities believing that a sports history could lead to "the breakdown of prisons through offender disruption such as strikes or riots."
Let's forget that they are denying a man reading material in his last hours.
There is something repugnant about the fact that they think a book -- any book -- would be the source of resistance, rather than the reality that 159 people have been executed since Gov. Rick Perry took office in 2001, or the fact that the people on Death Row have no civil rights, no access to radio, television or even arts and crafts.
It reminds me of the words of Carl Oglesby of the 1960s group Students for a Democratic Society: "It isn't the rebels who cause the troubles of the world, it's the troubles that cause the rebels."
The officials' fear that ideas -- even the ideas of sports history -- could cause a crisis in the Texas prisons reveals only how aware the Lone Star jailers are of how inhumanely they treat their prisoners.
There was a time in Texas when it was illegal to teach slaves to read. The fear was that ideas could turn anger often directed inward into action against those with their boots on black necks. It is perhaps the most fitting possible tribute to Jackie Robinson and Jack Johnson that their stories still strike fear into the hearts of those wearing the boots.
Dave Zirin is the author of the new book "Welcome to the Terrordome:" with an intro by Chuck D (Haymarket). You can receive his column Edge of Sports, every week by going to http://zirin.com/edgeofsports/?p=subscribe&id=1 . Contact him atedgeofsports@gmail.com



12 Comments so far
Show AllCompetitive games is part of the reason for the lack of sane leadership in the US.
To be a fan of this or that team is exactly like being a being an unthinking patriot. I don't know anybody on the team, I have no money bet on the game, but for some irrational reason it is intensely important to me that "my" team win.
This is one of the ways I learn that the most important thing in life is who dominates whom, who is able to impose it's will on whom, and, logically, by extension, who has a right to kill, maim, and torture whom.
At the same time, since it is "just a game" it serves to distract me from the reality for which it is only a symbol: War, Poverty, Ignorance that keeps the working class asleep and the ruling class in power. Sports is the opiate of the people---the new religion.
What red bloodded, macho, man who loves his country would complain about football? Probably the same kind of sissies who don't like war, or the bleeding heart liberals who think social problems can be solved by throwing money at them.
Ever hear of throwing money at the pentagon or the war on terror or football?
Nietzsche wrote:
"for some irrational reason it is intensely important to me that "my" team win"
Exactly! and when they do it will be because God loves your team more than the other one. I have very little faith in the legitimacy of corporate sports but I'm pretty sure that God doesn't rig football games and I'm completely sick of football players and coaches thanking God for their victories. However, I'm quite certain that [insert term for God] did align him/herself with [insert victorious country] in the [insert war] because the [insert defeated country] was evil. Hmmm. In bed, sports and war one thing leads to another.
Firstly, Zirin is the best writer writing about sports we have. Secondly, although sports have become largely corporate there have been and continue to be many examples of social protest coming from athletes. (past: Smith, Norman and Carlos in 68, Ali; present: Etan Thomas, Steve Nash, Carlos Delgado coming out against Iraq, to name a few)Like Zirin (who doesn't whole heartedly believe the Chomskyian perspective of sports as the opiate) I believe that the incessant media exposure of athletes gives them the opportunity to have a voice it is up to them to use it.
You want to run a slave state, you got to run it tight, seemless, no cracks in the walls of the Iron Theater, no hope, just grinding evil oppression forever.
Texas, you are America writ small. Very small. Inhumanly small, like the minds of the white Overseer crackers who run that plantation state for Massa.
There is no evil they will not perpetrate on any human being they can get their murderous hands on. And they love it. They love to torture other humans. They are genocidal monsters. All they need is one small opportunity to demonstrate their real blood drinking capacities. America is going to give them that opportunity very shortly. And while it won't be the "Blood of Jesus" they will bathe in human blood, just to show us what flat-earth tribal Xrstians they are.
Peece.
There have been alot of innocent people killed in Texas. It hurts my heart. SO many people locked up for non-violent crimes. While people who commit real crimes get off or don't even have to blink an eye at a jail sentence. Members of Congress give those sad "tear filled eye" appologize and swear they didn't mean to hurt any one.And everyone forgets whats going on.
Michael Vick allegedly killed dogs. Thats horrible, no doubt about that. But to compare dog fighting to Genocide, Torture, Rape, Murder, Rape, and more Genocide.
Why the hell wont people get mad about loosing there rights. Why are there not repeated news briefs about these unconstitutional bills and executive orders.
Why wont people get mad about the crimes that are being commited on the largest scale ever.
Every president and member of congress should be held for the crimes they commited. Just like everyone else is required to do. (except the rich, Law doesnt apply to people with green.)
~Future~
Tuesday, August 21, 5 p.m.
Emergency Rally against the Execution of Kenneth Foster, Jr.
Supporters and family of Kenneth Foster, Jr., who faces an August 30 execution date, will gather in front of the Capitol and march to the Governor's Mansion in protest. Kenneth sits on Texas' death row despite the fact that he killed no one. He was present when Mauriceo Brown shot Michael LaHood in 1996 and can be executed under Texas' unique Law of Parties.
Learn more about his case at http://savekenneth.blogspot.com and on this Democracy Now report -
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/09/140214
Location: Texas State Capitol, 11th and Congress, Austin Texas
=======================
Visit http://ThirdCoastActivist.org to get updates on local events and more.
Nietzsche August 19th, 2007 2:19 pm
Wrote
"Competitive games is part of the reason for the lack of sane leadership in the US."
I have to pick. I'd say competetive sports are a symptom, not the cause. Male dominated culture leads to male dominated activities. Like, you know, violence, beating people up, war, rape, killing, all the fun young guy stuff, things women represent a small slice of in reality. Maybe women are catching up, who knows, it's a matter of survival, we try to be strong and smart like men, to be considered human beings.
But when was the last time a female rapists made it out of the movies and into real life? When was the last time a dozen women gang-raped a man to the point the he couldn't have children? Oh...so sad...that stuff just happens. Sure. How many men are held down and brutalized by women with their mouths covered to stop the screaming? How many women get off on that, for years, until they're caught? A lot, do you think? What female mass murders aren't famous just for their gender? It's a given otherwise, isnt it?
Don't lie to yourself. America is male. It likes to stick itself in painful places it wasn't welcome. It does not respect consensual ANYTHING. It denies the concept. It rejoices in winning, it rejoices in conquest, it rejoices in violence. It doesn't mind being a bully against anything smaller and weaker that never stood a chance. America likes victims. That is America exactly, isnt it?
Iraq.
Most women are in prison now over drug related crimes. Most of THOSE women were sexually abused. Don't believe me, look it up, if you have the stomach for it, maybe I'm wrong. How many women are violent, and of them, how many are that way without having been hurt first by a male? Teenage males or adult males, what is the true measure of the male demographic? Who causes violence, who creates criminals?
Maybe it's just a question of who can be honest.
But anyway we're all equal under the law. How nice. Nice for the larger, more respected and safer male of the species, and I'm sure the inequality in numbers of female victims aren't their fault. Because some men get hurt too. Most men aren't responsible, but it works out well for all of them. They don't victimize each other the way they do us, and it's a nice set up. Slaves are handy. Can't blame them for keeping it this way, it must be very satisfying. Superior. Stronger. Smarter. Must be...better. Sure. Not like men do most of the crime. Not like that at all, and don't worry about it. Silly female thought. Why worry...it's always been this way. It's natural. Like slavery, it was natural for human nature too. Sure was, world-wide, in the Bible and everything, so don't expect it to change. They said. Be happy for what you have. They say. Be happy you can vote. Equality. ha. Now grip those keys hard while you make your way to the car in the parking garage, the huge empty scary parking garage. We're all equal. Keys are a good weapon, and, maybe you should have known better than to go alone (to a job interview maybe) wearing that dress (any dress) at night (by 4 pm in winter it's dark, but the interview was long) so good luck! Bring the mace too. Park under the light. And so on. Our lives. Every day.
But why go off on that? Discussing sports (or gender) isn't the point of the article at all, is it?
This was the point:
A form titled "Texas Dept of Criminal Justice, Publication review/denial notification" issued to Kenneth on Aug. 9 says that What's My Name Fool? was banned from the row: "It contains material that a reasonable person would construe as written solely for the purpose of communicating information designed to achieve the breakdown of prisons through offender disruption such as strikes or riots."
Book banning. Irrational book banning, if there is a rationale to be found. The book could have been about sports, politics or anything that fit the "...purpose of communicating information designed to achieve the breakdown of prisons ..." label.
In this case, his book contained two true accounts of famous black men on issues of racism. So, men in prison are not allowed to read about racial oppression because it's too dangerous? Too dangerous to read true history? THIS is America? THIS is how we treat prisoners?
Okay ya'll, HOW exactly are we better than everyone else again? WHEN does freedom become a lie, HOW many people have to lose it before it's a "problem"?
God. When is this country going to wake up. When are they going to apply real life to any of these things they say they believe all Americans deserve. My rant for the day.
Whatever4: You are a black woman aren't you? I enjoyed and agreed with your rant.
Ah Texas, the home of the most billionairs in america and the highest child poverty. Illiteracy rates are record setting too, but Bush has changed how it is measured so I'm sure it will improve over time. Then again it is Texas. My advise if you are poor...get the hell out of Texas. To all the decent people in Texas I appologize for pointing out your troubles. Those of you that held Tom Delay accountable for his crimes I applaud you. Those that go along with the status quo should be ashamed of yourselves.
whatever4 August 20th, 2007 12:54 pm
Nietzsche August 19th, 2007 2:19 pm Wrote
"Competitive games is part of the reason for the lack of sane leadership in the US."
I have to pick. I'd say competetive sports are a symptom, not the cause.
You have to pick?
CO_2 increase precedes temperature increase in the climatic record. So temperature increase must cause CO_2 to increase, rather than the other way around, meaning that all this anthropomorphic global warming stuff is just a hoax.
Well, what do we think of this logic? Causation is more complicated than that. In a close system, where everything is related, what apparently comes after may be the cause of what apparently comes before.
But polarized thinking doesn't allow for that possibility.
And polarized thinking certainly won't be the path to the peace that you claim to be looking for.
Nietzsche August 20th, 2007 3:21 pm
Whatever4: You are a black woman aren't you? I enjoyed and agreed with your rant.
Nietzsche you're too kind, not sure that rant deserved it, and that's probably the nicest thing I'll hear all day. No I'm not black. I can't imagine my identiy crisis if I were.
Antidote August 21st, 2007 3:45 am Nietzsche August 19th, 2007 2:19 pm Wrote
"Competitive games is part of the reason for the lack of sane leadership in the US."
I have to pick. I'd say competetive sports are a symptom, not the cause.
You have to pick?
CO_2 increase precedes temperature increase in the climatic record. So temperature increase must cause CO_2 to increase, rather than the other way around, meaning that all this anthropomorphic global warming stuff is just a hoax.
Well, what do we think of this logic? Causation is more complicated than that. In a close system, where everything is related, what apparently comes after may be the cause of what apparently comes before.
But polarized thinking doesn't allow for that possibility.
And polarized thinking certainly won't be the path to the peace that you claim to be looking for.
***************************
Dude you read all that explitive I wrote and that's all you found to pick on? But okay, since when hasn't the war on the sexes been polarizing? All I can think of to say, somewhat flippantly, is I don't think women started the war, which might mean we'll have to be the ones to finish it.
I can't see how you don't see competative sports as primarily male, so I don't know how to argue it.